Time to hit the brakes and make adjustments — Brake Safety Week is coming
Brake Safety Week, the brake-related inspection blitz conducted annually by the officer-members of the Commercial Vehicle Safety Alliance (CVSA) is scheduled for August 25 to 31, 2024. During Brake Safety Week, officers that conduct roadside inspections will be focusing on brake inspections. The officers will also educate drivers about their brakes.
While officers will check all brake components, the focus this year will be on brake linings and pads. The linings and pads are the components that contact the brake drum or rotor and create the friction necessary to slow and stop the vehicle.
Preparing requires two steps
There are two steps in preparing for Brake Safety Week. First is making sure all vehicles are current on maintenance and the second is improving driver inspections.
The first step: Maintenance
The first step in preparing is making sure all of your vehicles are current on maintenance. This is because many brake defects, and therefore the violations that are discovered during roadside inspections, are ones a driver cannot see during a normal prertrip and post-trip inspection. These include:
- Brake(s) out of adjustment (this is the most common brake violation)
- Brake hose under the vehicle chafing, kinked, or otherwise inadequate
- Brake lining damaged, contaminated, or inadequate
- Mismatched brake chambers or adjusters
When the vehicle is in for maintenance, the technician should visually inspect all brake components, check brake adjustment, and test the system for leaks and function (low air alarm activation, button pop out, etc.).
The driver component
The second step is reminding your drivers to conduct the required daily inspections and to pay close attention to the brakes. Part of this will involve instructing drivers on what to look for on the brake components they can see. This includes:
- Brake hoses that are rubbing,
- Damaged or loose brake chambers,
- Slack adjusters that are being pushed too far,
- Missing connecting hardware, and
- Oil or grease on the inside of the hub or tire.
Drivers should also be reminded to conduct system checks regularly. A driver system check includes checking for leaks, low air alarm function, button pop out, and parking brake and service brake function.
Key to remember: While Brake Safety Week is sneaking up on us, we still have time to make sure all of our vehicles are current on maintenance and that our drivers are conducting proper inspections.